Question: As a senior partner at one of the nation s largest

As a senior partner at one of the nation’s largest public accounting firms, you serve as chair- person of the firm’s financial reporting policy committee. You are also the firm’s chief spokes- person on financial reporting matters that come before the FASE and the Securities and Exchange Commission. The year is 1997.Two new debt securities have caught the attention of your committee, the FASE, the SEC, and the Treasury Department. Dresser Industries recently completed a $200 million offering of so-called century bonds that mature in 2096, or in 100 years. Safra Republic Holdings announced that in October it will issue $250 million of millennium bonds that mature in 2997, or in 1,000 years. Neither company is a client of your firm.

Required 1. Suppose that Dresser Industries issued its $200 million century bonds on January 1, 1996, at a market yield of 7.5%, the same as the stated interest rate. To keep things easy, also assume that the bonds pay interest just once a year, on December 31. Compute the bonds’ issue price. How much of that price comes from the present value of the interest payments, and how much comes from the promised principal payment?2. In present value terms, how much of a tax savings does the company obtain from its century bond? (Use a 40% effective tax rate.) How much of a tax savings would be lost if only the first 40 years of interest deductions were allowed?3. Suppose that Dresser Industries’ century bonds were issued with a stated rate of 7.5% when the market yield rate was 8.5%. What would the issue price be? How about if the market yield were 6.5%?4. In October 2011, The Ohio State University sold 5500 million worth of 100-year bonds, becoming the first public university to issue a so-called “century” bond. The bonds were priced to yield 4.849% which was 1.70 percentage points over 30-year Treasury rates.Ohio State was established in 1870, has (4,077 enrolled students, and a campus of more than 1,700 acres with 457 buildings. Two private universities, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and the University of Southern California, had issued century bonds earlier that year. Typically, universities such as Ohio State issue 30-year tax-free bonds with fixed or floating interest rates. Public and private universities are tax-exempt institutions but the income from century bonds is taxable to the buyer. What are the likely economic advantage to Ohio State of issuing century bonds?5. Suppose that Safra Republic were a U.S. company paying taxes at a 40% rate. In present value terms, how much of a tax savings does the company receive from its millennium bonds? How much of a tax savings would be lost if only the first 40 years of interest deductions were allowed?6. Suppose that the millennium bonds were issued with a 7.125% stated interest rate when the market yield rate was 8.125%. What would the issue price be? How about if the market yield were 6.125%?7. In early 1997, the U.S. Treasury Department proposed eliminating the corporate tax deduction for interest paid on the last 60 years of century bonds (see “Is the Party Over for 100-Year Bonds?” The Wall Street Journal, February 4, 1997). The Treasury argued that 100-year debt should be treated the same as equity because the bonds are more like permanent capital. Since stock dividend payments can’t be deducted from taxable corporate earnings, the Treasury said, interest payments on the last 60 years of 100-year debt shouldn’t be deducted either. Why would the Treasury department be opposed to unlimited interest deductions on century and millennium bonds? According to U.S. GAAP, are these securities debt or equity?